Fruge v. Pacific Employers Ins. Co.

71 So. 2d 625
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 31, 1954
Docket3798
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 71 So. 2d 625 (Fruge v. Pacific Employers Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fruge v. Pacific Employers Ins. Co., 71 So. 2d 625 (La. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

71 So.2d 625 (1954)

FRUGE
v.
PACIFIC EMPLOYERS INS. CO.

No. 3798.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

March 22, 1954.
Rehearing Denied April 26, 1954.
Writ of Certiorari Granted May 31, 1954.

*626 Tate & Fusilier, Ville Platte, for appellant.

Taylor, Porter, Brooks, Fuller & Phillips, Baton Rouge, for appellee.

LOTTINGER, Judge.

This is a workmen's compensation suit wherein the plaintiff seeks to recover benefits as for total permanent disability. The occurrence of the accident, the hazardous nature of his employment and of his employer's business and his rate of pay at the time of the accident are all admitted. The sole question for determination centers around the extent and duration of the disability sustained as a result of the accident in question. The trial judge has favored us with written reasons for judgment which we herewith set forth in full:

"I have found difficulty in determining whether this plaintiff is partially disabled or totally disabled when his present condition as described by the medical experts and evidence are considered in the light of judicial discussions in the application of the respective provisions of the workmen's compensation statute of this State. My findings of fact by the evidence are mainly that the plaintiff is forty-one years old with no literary education. He attended school only to the third grade, but cannot now read or write and he neither speaks nor understands the English language. He testified in this case through the aid of an interpreter. He is a native of the Village of Chatagnier and for the past seventeen years has been a resident of Ville Platte, Evangeline Parish, Louisiana. Originally he was a tenant farmer. He quit farming about eight years ago and got work by the day at all sorts of jobs. He learned carpentry and painting from his father and they together built some small houses and did repair and maintenance work for several years. He made 35 to 40 dollars per week at this work. He next went to work for a Mr. Tate as a carpenter and painter and working in a cotton-seed oil mill and doing all sorts of work for this employer for about two years. The testimony has not been transcribed and I don't recall what pay he received from Mr. Tate in that period. While working for Mr. Tate this plaintiff hurt his back and drew compensation for more than a year after which he was paid a settlement of $650.00. He then went to work for his father at the same work they were doing before he took the job with Mr. Tate—carpentering, painting and so forth. After five or six months of this employment plaintiff's friend, Vige, gave him a job working in an oil well drilling crew. They worked on five or six different well drilling projects during the nine or ten months prior to June 24, 1951, when plaintiff suffered an accidental injury. Plaintiff suffered an accidental injury. Plainthese drilling crews. Most of plaintiff's work was handling 1¼ to 1½ inch pipe which was 31 to 32 feet long. Plaintiff used various tools on the drilling rig, including wrenches to screw the joints of pipe together. He also carried sacks of dirt which he dumped into a tank for making mud to be used in the drilling process. Plaintiff didn't know how to operate the mud machine and the driller each time told the plaintiff when to dump the dirt and how many sacks to put in. Most of plaintiff's *627 work was performed on the ground, but when something broke sometimes he was required to climb up the rig to assist in fixing whatever was needed.

"Further, on June 24, 1951, while working for the Williams Drilling Company, near Crowley, Louisiana, plaintiff was handling some pipe when a joint of the pipe accidentally fell on the top of plaintiff's right foot causing fracture of the tibia and fibula at the ankle. On that day following the accident plaintiff was admitted to Acadia Hospital at Crowley where X-rays were made, the fractures reduced and cast applied, according to the written report of Dr. J. W. Faulk. Dr. Faulk also reported that the plaintiff would need further treatment for two or three months.

"This case was tried on July 3, 1953. The plaintiff claims to be totally disabled to do work of any reasonable character. He prays for the maximum compensation, medical expenses, penalties and attorney's fees.

"I find further that, according to plaintiff's own testimony, for several months prior to the trial of the case, the plaintiff worked for a plumber named Smith. Plaintiff testified that he could not bear heavy continuous weight on his injured foot and that his work with the plumber consisted mainly of threading pipe and other shop work and spading dirt to backfill ditches. He was asked how he shoved the spade into the dirt. He first answered he used his right foot to push the spade into the dirt and then changed his statement to say that he did not use his foot at all because the dirt was soft. He did not work all day every day for the plumber. He went to work at 8:00 in the morning and always quit at 12:00 and rested some of the time. Plaintiff states that at this work he earned six to eight dollars per week. Plaintiff supplemented this work in the afternoons and on off days as a card dealer in a saloon for which he was paid one-fourth of the house cut on each deal of the cards, or a total of about $12.00 per week. In addition to these jobs with the plumber and the saloon he also spaded and plowed his own garden and mowed his yard with a push machine at various times. Plaintiff says he desires to continue the rest of his life as a roughneck in the oil drilling business, but he has not asked his friend, Vige, to give him any work since the accident because he doesn't think he can stand on his feet all day without pain in his ankle and big toe. Plaintiff stated that he has not attempted to climb any ladders since the accident except short ones and said "I do not believe I could climb too high'. He further testified he did not know how to drive an automobile and the only kinds of work he knows how to do are painting, carpentering, roughnecking and shop work.

"Referring now to the medical testimony, the only injury revealed by the X-rays taken on the day of the accident according to the report of Dr. Faulk was the fracture of the tibia and fibula at the right ankle joint. It is to be presumed that Dr. Faulk based his estimate of two or three months as the time needed for further treatment upon the type of fracture of these bones. His estimate as to the fracture was not far wrong because the testimony of Dr. Bannerman shows that the fractures were almost entirely healed in November, of 1951.

"On October 15, 1951, Dr. James Gilly, an orthopedic surgeon of Lafayette, Louisiana, had another X-ray made and made examination of the plates and of the plaintiff. Dr. Gilly reported, as did Dr. Romagosa, the radiologist who made the X-ray at that time, that the fracture of the lateral and medial malleoli of the left (this must be a typographical error as it was plaintiff's right ankle which was injured) ankle were in good position and alignment and that these fractures were healed to the extent that plaintiff should be able to walk without pain. Darland's medical Dictionary defines the term `lateralmalleolus' as `the process at the outer side of the lower end of the fibula' and the term `medial malleolus' as `the process at the inner side of the lower end of the tibia'. Therefore, it appears that Dr. Faulk, Dr. Gilly and Dr. Romagosa were referring to the *628 same bones. Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
71 So. 2d 625, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fruge-v-pacific-employers-ins-co-lactapp-1954.